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Deep Learning with Theano

You're reading from  Deep Learning with Theano

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786465825
Pages 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Christopher Bourez Christopher Bourez
Profile icon Christopher Bourez

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Deep Learning with Theano
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. Theano Basics 2. Classifying Handwritten Digits with a Feedforward Network 3. Encoding Word into Vector 4. Generating Text with a Recurrent Neural Net 5. Analyzing Sentiment with a Bidirectional LSTM 6. Locating with Spatial Transformer Networks 7. Classifying Images with Residual Networks 8. Translating and Explaining with Encoding – decoding Networks 9. Selecting Relevant Inputs or Memories with the Mechanism of Attention 10. Predicting Times Sequences with Advanced RNN 11. Learning from the Environment with Reinforcement 12. Learning Features with Unsupervised Generative Networks 13. Extending Deep Learning with Theano Index

Classification loss function


The loss function is an objective function to minimize during training to get the best model. Many different loss functions exist.

In a classification problem, where the target is to predict the correct class among k classes, cross-entropy is commonly used as it measures the difference between the real probability distribution, q, and the predicted one, p, for each class:

Here, i is the index of the sample in the dataset, n is the number of samples in the dataset, and k is the number of classes.

While the real probability of each class is unknown, it can simply be approximated in practice by the empirical distribution, that is, randomly drawing a sample out of the dataset in the dataset order. The same way, the cross-entropy of any predicted probability, p, can be approximated by the empirical cross-entropy:

Here, is the probability estimated by the model for the correct class of example .

Accuracy and cross-entropy both evolve in the same direction but measure...

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